starlight

Rediscovering The Best Version Of Mark Miller In 'Starlight'
Rediscovering The Best Version Of Mark Miller In 'Starlight'
Rediscovering The Best Version Of Mark Miller In 'Starlight'
When Mark Millar and Goran Parlov's Starlight was announced, I had mixed feelings. Goran Parlov may be one of the five best comics artists living today, and it sounded like a good idea: a retired hero in the mold of John Carter returns to the planet he once saved, decades after his prime, to be a hero once again. But often it seems that no matter how good an idea is, Mark Millar can't help but screw it up. His love of sensationalism and his need to be controversial have sapped the power out of many of his strongest ideas, and I wasn't that surprised when our own Kevin Church ripped the first issue to shreds. I read it anyway, because Goran Parlov exists, and life is much better for it. I was a little surprised to find out that I totally disagreed with Church's review. And I was shocked that the Mark Millar that I like actually decided to turn up.
REVIEW: Millar and Parlov's 'Starlight' #1 from Image Comics
REVIEW: Millar and Parlov's 'Starlight' #1 from Image Comics
REVIEW: Millar and Parlov's 'Starlight' #1 from Image Comics
Did you like The Incredibles and Flash Gordon? Are you completely unaware of the existence of Grant Morrison's take on English sci-fi icon Dan Dare? Then you are the perfect audience for Starlight, a new Image Comics project by Mark Millar and Goran Parlov that waves its influences in front of your face and hopes that's enough to accomplish what the actual book does not.